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aubiefifty

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  1. Forwarded this email? Subscribe here for more fork over $364 million, you fraudulent **** settle in as we explore the s***-blizzard of financial ruin that’s about to bury Trump Jeff Tiedrich Feb 17 READ IN APP “A lack of contrition that borders on pathological.” — Judge Arthur Engoron so, the s*** finally hit the fan. yesterday afternoon, Judge Engoron dropped the hammer and found Little Donny ****face, his two ****hole sons — Individual-1 Junior and The Dumb One — and skeevy accountant Allen Weisselberg liable to the tune of 364 million bucks. additionally, Trump is forbidden from heading any New York-based corporation for three years, and is forbidden from receiving loans from New York banks. I don’t know what happened here. Donny had a foolproof strategy of acting like a childish a**hole during the trial — sighing, waving his arms, keeping up a running commentary, and occasionally bolting from the courtroom — and somehow all this failed to charm the judge. maybe it was all the times Trump called Engoron a socialist maniac that failed to win the day. or maybe it’s simply that Donny is a life-long conman and fraudster, and he finally got caught. settle in as we explore the s***-blizzard of financial ruin that’s about to bury Trump. Upgrade to paid first of all, the cash Trump has to come up with is a lot more than $364 mil. it’s actually closer to $450 million. you see, interest on the judgement accrues from when the fraud occurred — not from the time of the trial. so Trump is already on the hook for interest going back years. and oh wait — we almost forgot about the millions he now owes to the woman he raped, E. Jean Carroll. ok, let’s factor that in. Trump doesn’t have half a billion in cash lying around — and he’s forbidden to borrow money from banks — so he’s going to have to sell some of his vermin-infested properties. oh, and there’s also a court-appointed monitor, Barbara Jones, who will oversee all of Trump’s future financial transactions. Donny can’t do s*** without first asking her pretty-please if it’s ok. don’t cry, Donny — we’re throwing in this tiny violin for free. it looks as if Trump is ******-er than ******, so is it any wonder that he spent the evening melting straight the **** down on his crappy app? does anyone have any idea what Trump is yammering about? he keeps talking about how his case was “was already won in the appellate division.” no it wasn’t. Trump hasn’t won s***. Trump is a ******* loser. is this just some bedtime story that his parking garage lawyers tell him to keep him from stroking out? don’t worry, Donny. you actually won. now here’s your binky, it’s time for beddy-bye. hey — speaking of parking garage lawyers, look who’s still alive and kicking. it’s Alina Habba! apparently Trump can’t find anyone to replace her so she’s still going on Newsmax and stupiding at a mile a minute. “the damages and restitution should go to Donald Trump. president Trump has been in three years of fights with Miss James and her team, and he didn’t do anything wrong.” yeah, no. that’s not how this works, Little Ms Can’t Fake Smart. that’s not how any of this works. now let’s take a look at what the most-gullible dumb-asases in the universe are up to. oh look, they’ve started a go-fund-me to bail out Dear Leader’s ass. hey, they’ve already raised $12,204 to keep their cult leader from having to rummage through skid row trash cans in search of his next meal. keep it up, clowns. you only have $354,987,796 to go! Donald Trump is a vainglorious moron who did this to himself. he could have lived in the shadows and quietly continued to launder Russian mob money and lie to banks for the rest of his life, and no one would have been the wiser. but he had to put himself under the bright lights of the most visible job in the world, and crime so flagrantly that people naturally started digging around. remember, though — the violin’s free. everyone is entitled to my own opinion is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
  2. i know my eye sight is bad but did you paint your feet?
  3. we need to push for kids or members to hold aufam signs up for ANY gameday event it would be great for the board. i cannot stand statefarm but their marketing is pretty cool for the small cost of a net hat.
  4. i thought only really old people could call folks sonny. if one is going to lash out it should be funny. be like fiddy folks . um well not the big dummy aubie but the shock humor and handsome and awesome aubie...........i am bipolar so tellme which side you want to talk to. grins
  5. ok i got you. i really hate to say this but sometimes i get confused and read things wrong. you are always pretty much a straight shooter. and that is my old age i think and not gummies.
  6. they need to show auburn stuff more and talk less. we need charles and fishback to bump it up a few notches.
  7. i have an auto rookie card of his.........
  8. I am selling boxes of tissues with snowflake prints on the cheap. hit me up.................
  9. i am not gonna kid you guys......i got chills when the team started singing............
  10. i love how you think! plus i love your dog..............
  11. WOW! There is absolutely nothing on football today. Even youtube is slacking. i am gonna have to have a talk with these guys......... if something pops up i will post it.i got basketball and baseball stuff you guys can check out.
  12. Do Better! it is not drugs it is aubie shorthand bro.................grins. sometimes it is Not drugs it is just my dumbassness kicking in. now i am hurt.............
  13. Biden has a huge decision to make — one of the most important of his presidency Henry Blodget Fri, February 16, 2024 at 1:52 PM CST·4 min read President Biden is a lifelong public servant, and he's behind in polls for reasons he can't change. So, for the sake of the country, Biden has a critical decision to make: Whether or not to step aside so the Democrats can nominate another candidate. President Joe Biden has dedicated almost his entire professional life to serving our country. This summer, he will have another critical opportunity to do that. Specifically, he will have to make a decision that, in my opinion, could determine the future of American democracy. That decision is this: Whether to accept his party's nomination to run for a second term… or step aside and let the Democrats nominate another candidate. Whether or not you believe that "democracy is on the ballot" this fall (or care), you will probably agree that the stakes in this election are unusually high. So, at their convention this summer, the Democrats will want to nominate the strongest possible candidate. Based on recent polls, it does not seem that Biden is necessarily the strongest possible candidate. And even once he finishes sweeping the primaries, Biden does not necessarily have to be the candidate. Because, as political experts explain, Biden could still step aside before the Democratic convention this August and allow the Democrats to nominate someone else. So, over the next six months, for the sake of his country — or at the very least the Democratic party and its policy objectives — Biden needs to dispassionately assess whether he is, in fact, the strongest possible candidate. If not, he should step aside. In making this decision, Biden needs to look and think carefully about not what is "true" or "right" or about what he wants most Americans to think, but what Americans actually think. According to recent polls, even in our polarized country, most Americans actually agree about several things. One is that ex-President Trump would do a better job than Biden on the economy (mostly, it seems, because of still-high inflation). Another is that Trump would do better on immigration, another highly visible issue. A third is that most Americans (a remarkable 81% of us) think that Biden is too old to run for president. (Most of us think Trump is too old, too, but fewer of us.) In a diverse country, 81% is a startling and resounding consensus. What’s more, 76% of us have either "major" or "moderate" concerns about Biden’s mental and physical fitness for a second term. Now, maybe all of that is just unfairness or perception. Maybe Americans who think those things are just being stupid or falling for oppositional propaganda or are just being worrywarts. But here’s the thing: When it comes to elections, perception is reality. And, for most voters, our current perception is that Trump is the less bad and less old of two weak candidates that most Americans have deep misgivings about. If, despite Biden’s age, Americans agreed he was doing a bang-up job as president or were thumping Trump in the polls, we could dismiss these concerns. But only 37% of us approve of the job Biden is doing. And Biden is now trailing ex-Pres. Trump in the swing-state polls and losing to him in the betting markets. True — the election is nine months away. True — a lot might change before then, including the polls. But the way things stand today, it looks to many like Biden’s decision to accept the Democratic nomination might affect the future of America’s democracy — and, with it, the Constitution and country that Biden has sworn to protect. Of course, a key factor in deciding whether to step aside is whether there is anyone else the Democrats could nominate who could be a stronger candidate. Polls suggest, for example, that it would be stupid for Biden to step aside so the Democrats can nominate Vice President Kamala Harris because she would do even worse against Trump. But most potential Democratic candidates deferred to Biden's desire to enter the primaries and didn't enter the race, so I don't think we really know yet whether there is a stronger candidate. By nominating someone at the convention, moreover, Democrats can choose the candidate they think has the best chance to win the general election, as opposed to the one that appeals most to Democratic voters in the primaries. As New York Times columnist Ross Douthat has explained, it would be better if Biden waited until mid-summer to make (or at least announce) his decision: The next six months would provide time to see whether the polls change meaningfully — a key factor in the analysis. The waiting period would also give the broader Democratic party time to figure out whether anyone else might make a stronger candidate. And it would allow more of Trump's legal trials to play out. If, by early August, the analysis suggests that Biden is, in fact, the strongest candidate, then the best way to serve his country would be to accept the nomination. If, on the other hand, Biden concludes that someone else might have a better chance, he could serve his country better by dropping out. Read the original article on Business Insider
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